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he means quicksort will be enough to make further boot time improvements due to precomputing and storing the sorted list insignificants


A movie "Unrueh" (Unrest) has just been released in the theaters about Kropotkin's Swiss period. Haven't seen it yet but it is on my list


Tiptop (one wonders if an anarchist Jura would or would not have reacted in a more timely fashion to the invention of the quartz watch?)


salaries rarely and hardly ever go down. however inflation does exactly that in real terms. This is an interesting article about it: https://www.interfluidity.com/v2/9566.html


*anthropic


Huh. Didn't realize I had those two words mixed up. Thanks!


Socrates didn't leave any writings


Yeah, but Plato, who knew him, did

I mean this quote isn't in Plato's writings either but still


But the accounts 1 and 2 on VCE 4 (the ones funded by Monero) weren't registered in either Morgan's or Lichtenstein's name. They were created with fake credentials.

The feds were able to link them to the couple because bitcoins were moved from VCE 4 to other accounts that also had received bitcoins which were traceable to their alphabay accounts.

If they had funneled everything through monero I can't say that they wouldn't have got caught like this.


There isn't $3.6B worth of Monero, though.

https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/monero/


No the moment after they moved to monero it should've been untraceable. The discrepancy you are seeing is that the USG definitely has tools to trace any of these "anonymous" coins. It's highly likely that these are honeypots.

Nobody knows who Satoshi was, everybody just assumes he isn't the feds themselves. Such scenario would be so catastrophic to organizations that rely on its advertised anonymity and it would be the best investment ever since you could just keep denying you have this capability, always coming up with a cover story (keys in cloud, we traced their keys, they were dumb etc).

This would keep criminals guessing, the economic value of laundering with crypto is too great to give it up but at the end of the day, they can only operate under uncertainty.


"Tu quoque" is a later tradition. According to Suetonius, who writes more than a century later but is our oldest source on this, the literal words were in greek and it was "kai su teknon?", which is literally translated as "You too son?".


The fact that Suetonius wrote some of his works in Greek does not mean Caesar spoke Greek when murdered. Hence attributing to him the Greek 'kai su teknon' is as much inaccurate as any early or later tradition.


Teknon literal translation is child, but you’re right, here it’s used in the sense of son.

Three different interpretations of these last words are mentioned in this Quarantine answer: https://www.quora.com/If-you-accept-the-premise-that-Caesars....


you want fixed point for accounting, but there's no reason not to use floating point in quantitative analysis


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